Reuters added that the group’s leader, former anti-Gaddhafi war
commander Ibrahim Jathran, told a rebel television station that
the group would end the blockade and encourage dialogue “with
all Libyans.”

Jathran’s group has seized three major oil exporting ports - Ras Lanuf,
Es-Sider, and Zueitina - in the impoverished east of the country
since August 2013.

In early March, the rebels started exporting oil from the port of
Es-Sider. The first shipment was sent on a tanker known as
Morning Glory, which was flying the North Korean flag.

The move resulted in Libya's parliament sacking Prime Minister
Ali Zeidan, who fled to Germany. Libya prepared military forces
“set up to liberate the ports and end the
blockage,”said parliamentary spokesman Omar Hmeidan, and to
retrieve the US$38 million worth of oil seized in Morning Glory,
which is thought to belong to Saudi owners.

Rebels called any attack a “declaration of war.”

"We have sent land units to defend Cyrenaica to the west of
Sirte...and we also have boats patrolling regional waters,"
Essam al-Jahani, a senior militia chief, told Reuters.

Days later, US Navy Seals boarded and took control of Morning
Glory. The operation, approved by US President Barack Obama, came
at the behest of the Libyan and Cypriot governments. No injuries
during the seizure were reported. The ship was eventually
returned to Libyan authorities.

The overall blockade of export routes has shrunk Libya’s exports
from 1.4 million barrels per day a year ago, to just 230,000
barrels per day.

The rebel port campaign was initially an attempt by rebels in
eastern Libya to claim a larger share of wealth from the
country’s rich oil reserves.

As time passed, the blockade became a battle for independence, as
separatist groups have called for a division of Libya into three
regions, based on tribal boundaries.

The Libyan government has little control over the whole of the country, as
ex-rebel commanders, former exiles, Islamists, tribal leaders,
and federalists all vie for positions in the vacuum.

The lack of consistent state military operations has empowered rival militias, which form a mix of
security forces and “quasi-official military units.”

"Really there is no army, I thought there was one, but then I
realized there really isn't any," former premier Zeidan said
from Germany, according to Reuters.

Various militias say they are simply providing local security
until the government can strengthen.

But control of oil is crucial to establishing authority over
Libya, as it provides more than 90 percent of foreign income to
the country, which has the biggest reserves in the whole of
Africa.

"There was a euphoria that accompanied the overthrow of the
dictator that did not take into account some of the stark
realities...What is the unifying idea here?" a Libya-based
Western diplomat told Reuters.

From Europe, ousted Zeidan has called Libya a potential base for
stateless terror groups looking to exploit divisions, as in
Afghanistan.

"Libya could be a base for Al-Qaeda for any operation to
Italy, to Britain, to France, to Spain, to Morocco, to
everywhere. Weapons are everywhere, ammunition is
everywhere," Zeidan told UK newspaper The Times while meeting
with British politicians in London.

"My plan is to struggle to reform the state, to stabilize the
situation,” he said.